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#T-Mobile
marvey-sideblog · 2 months
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apara-dise-penguin · 3 months
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favorites parts of the commercials with ben barnes for t-mobile.
@blairwaldorfvibezzz ___ ♥.
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lilircloset · 6 months
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Lili for T-Mobile.
Lili appears to wear the Rixo ‘Kimmy Dress’ (Sold Out) for her partnership with T-Mobile.
The Kimmy looks like a smart black-linen waistcoat and midi skirt at first glance but rewards closer inspection
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tomorrowusa · 1 month
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Corporations pay their CEOs extravagantly while trying to cheat on taxes.
It would be one thing if, alongside the exorbitant executive pay, the quality of American CEO-ing was going up. But these executives are making off with bigger bags of boodle despite their persistent incompetence: Media executives keep running their businesses into the ground, tech firms are laying people off because of vibes, the planes keep nearly crashing, and examples of insane eye-popping greed—like Rite-Aid’s decision to claw back severance paid out to laid-off workers on the same day they handed their CEO a $20 million bonus—keep on coming. So it may come as no surprise that there’s a robust connection between the overindulged CEOs and the firms that are most flagrantly dodging their fair share of taxes. For a report released Wednesday, the Institute for Policy Studies teamed up with Americans for Tax Fairness to spelunk into the balance sheets at some of America’s best-known tax scofflaws between 2018 and 2022. What they found was pretty consistent: The firms took home high profits and lavished their top executives with exorbitant pay, all while stiffing Uncle Sam. The excess is stunning. “For over half (35) of these corporations,” the study reports, “their payouts to top corporate brass over that entire span exceeded their net tax payments.” An additional 29 firms managed this feat for “at least two of the five years in the study period.” Eighteen firms paid a grand total of zero dollars during that five-year span, 17 of which were given tax refunds. All in all, the 64 companies in the report “posted cumulative pre-tax domestic profits of $657 billion” during the study period, but “paid an average effective federal tax rate of just 2.8 percent (the statutory rate is 21 percent) while paying their executives over $15 billion.” Which firms are the worst of the worst? You can probably guess the company that tops the list because it’s the one run by The New Republic’s 2023 Scoundrel of the Year. During the five years of the study, Tesla took home $4.4 billion in profits as CEO Elon Musk carted off $2.28 billion in stock options, which, since his 2018 payday, have ballooned to nearly $56 billion—a compensation plan so outlandish that the Delaware Court of Chancery canceled it. Tesla has, during that same period of time, paid an effective tax rate of zero percent through a combination of carrying forward losses from unprofitable years and good old-fashioned offshore tax dodging.
Elon Musk is either the world's richest or second richest person. But he still wants more. Give him credit for pathological greed.
In all fairness, Musk is not alone when it comes to enriching himself while screwing workers.
What sort of innovations have these CEOs wrought from this well-remunerated period? T-Mobile’s Mike Sievert presided over the Sprint merger that led to $23.6 million in stock buybacks and 5,000 layoffs. Netflix’s Reed Hastings poured $15 billion in profit into jacking up subscription rates. Nextera Energy has devoted $10 million in dark money in a “ghost candidate scheme” to thwart climate change candidates. Darden Restaurants has been fighting efforts to raise the minimum wage. Metlife has been diverting government money meant to fund low-cost housing into other, unrelated buckraking ventures. And some First Energy executives from the study period are embroiled in a corruption scandal that’s so massive that even Musk might find it to be beyond the pale.
These oligarchs are going to spend lavishly to elect Republicans who would give them even bigger tax breaks.
Fortunately, they can't literally buy votes. If we return to old school grassroots precinct work then we can thwart the MAGA Republican puppets of billionaire oligarchs.
One to one contact is a more important factor than TV or online ads in convincing people to vote your way. It takes more effort, but democracy was not built by slacktivism in the first place.
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johnschneiderblog · 9 days
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Bar-hopping
Temperature: 44 degrees. Winds speed: 22 mph. Cell phone service: 4 solid bars.
Trumpets, please ....
On Wednesday, as we entered the home stretch in our first trip to the cottage this year - 10 miles of U.S. 23 - Sharon gave me continuous rolling reports: "three bars ....two bars ... three bars ... one bar ... two bars ... "
So it went, a real cliffhanger, but when we pulled into our driveway, we had four beautiful bars on our phones and speedy access to the Interner.
As I wrote Monday, we parted ways with our long-time cell/Internet provider (AT&T) and took up with T-Mobile for cell service, with a portable Wi-Fi hotspot.
With the AT&T hotspot, our service at our cottage near Cheboygan was pretty good, but at home it was barely functional. The T-Mobile guy got out his map and assured us that the switch would yield better service at both places.
Here's to you, T-Mobile guy ...
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mayalaen · 10 days
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T-mobile decided to ignore the shipping address AND billing address and instead send a device to my business address only without the suite number.
Who knows why.
But it happened.
I contacted T-mobile, but once they ship it out, they have no ability to tell UPS it's the wrong address so they told me to contact UPS.
UPS said I needed My Choice to change an address.
It's $15 but T-mobile said they'd refund me that money since it was their fault.
So okay I go in and try to sign up for My Choice.
UPS says no you already have My Choice for Business and business is free with your account.
So okay I use My Choice Business and input the tracking number.
UPS says oh no that's a delivery marked as a box going to a residential address (which should've been my house) and we can't change that you need residential My Choice. Okay lemme sign into residential.
Nope that's a business address you need UPS Business.
So now UPS won't change it because it's marked as residential even though it's obviously being shipped to a business and won't even let me add the suite number even though that address has 15 businesses/suites.
I told the T-mobile guy this and he was genuinely stumped.
He's like I've never heard of this happening before and I don't even know what to tell you.
The only thing he could suggest was to wait until UPS tries 3 times to deliver to an address that doesn't have a suite and finally sends it back to T-mobile, T-mobile will refund me for the device, then we start all over again with sending the device out again after I sign up for that device again.
UPS won't talk to me about a residential package on a business address. And when I say it's a business address they're like yeah but it's a residential package.
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synkcity · 4 days
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T-mobile users, for T-Mobile Tuesdays T-Mobile is offering a coupon code for a $5 movie ticket to see Challengers through Atom!
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ralfmaximus · 6 months
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The plan became public knowledge two weeks ago with the leak of internal documents that said customers would be switched to pricier tiers starting with the November bill cycle unless they contacted T-Mobile to opt out. Documents showed that T-Mobile customer service reps were trained to tell users who complained, "We are not raising the price of any of our plans; we are moving you to a newer plan with more benefits at a different cost."
Dick move. And they backed off only when news of the dick move was leaked ahead of time.
Anyone using T-Mobile? Maybe it's time you didn't.
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g4zdtechtv · 5 days
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youtube
THE PILE PRESENTS: X-Play - Quick! Grab the Remote! | 12/7/04
What's so Ultimate about this episode?
(4GTV - LIVE. 24/7. WATCH NOW!)
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burningspy · 9 months
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Update on my post from last night: (catch up here)
I decided to do what it seems most people do when they have a complaint about a company these days, I ranted about it on twitter.
Eventually, I got an automated response from their tech support account asking me to send them a DM and they would look into my issue. So I did just that, giving them a bit more detailed info on what was going on.
The first person to respond was a total asshole. Didn't even take time to pretend to research a solution. Just automatically said the phone I bought will not work, then proceeded to list several other phones I could purchase at one of their stores.
Obviously, I was not very happy with that answer. So I gave a slightly angry (for me) reply stating that I will not buy another phone; I only want to use the phone I already spent $800 to purchase, and that the manufacturer assures that it is fully compatible with T-Mobile network. After that, the "support" person just disappeared. Never replied again.
I decided to take a new screenshot of their site showing that the IMEI number is compatible and will work. This time more detailed and even showing that number, as well as writing another statement about my confusion on this issue.
45 minutes later, I get another automated response tweet (the same as the original) asking for me to send a DM and they would help. I simply tweeted back that I've already done that and the original person abandoned the convo.
Shortly after that a new (and much better) tech support guy replied to the screenshot and message I had sent earlier. He was as confused as I was about why the website would show the phone was compatible, but their internal systems claim that it's not. He even stated that he would try to do some deeper research into the problem and asked if there was anything else I needed help with while I waited.
To which I said no, but asked if it was possible if I just took the SIM card from my old phone and put it into the new one? Would that cause any problems?
He quickly replied telling me to go ahead and try it whenever I was ready and to let him know the results. He was just as curious about this issue as I was.
After which, I did exactly that. Powered up the new phone with the old SIM card, and ... "Can't connect to network." Damn! "Try again?" Of course! .... and success. It connected the second time and I have not noticed any issues. I made a couple test phone calls just to be sure, then informed Darren (very helpful tech support guy) of my results. We were both very happy with how things turned out.
So, now my new phone is working and I'm spending way too much time still trying to get everything set up the way I want it.
TLDR: T-Mobile tried to tell me that my new Nothing Phone 2 would not work on their network and I proved them wrong!
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marvey-sideblog · 29 days
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apara-dise-penguin · 3 months
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Ben Barnes for T-Mobile. Part 3 of 5
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itsagentromanoff · 2 years
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ChrisEvans RIP iPhone 6s
We had a good run. I’ll miss your home button.
I won’t miss the nightly battle of trying to get you to charge. Or your grainy pictures. Or your sudden drops from 100% battery, to 15%, to completely dead all within minutes.
It was a wild ride. Rest easy, pal.
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lisslan · 7 months
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destinyc1020 · 1 year
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Just a heads up for T-Mobile users.
https://www.t-mobile.com/tv-streaming/apple-tv-plus-deal
Thanks Anon!!! 😁👍🏾
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fan-enby-anonymous · 1 year
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So get this shit! On Sunday night I was on my phone, writing a YouTube comment, when my phone screen suddenly went almost completely dark except for a thin sliver on the very top of my screen. No fall damage, no water damage, just suddenly dark and unresponsive. The next day, I went in to my local T-Mobile store to try to get it replaced, the woman there says they’ll do a warranty exchange.
So two days later, I go in to get my new phone, they bring out my new phone, and then they look on their tablet and say “Oh sorry, it looks like there’s an issue with the paper work. We can’t give you this phone. We’re going to cancel and resend the warranty exchange request. Come back tomorrow.”
So I come back in today. And this time, somebody else looks at my phone. And they say, “Oh sorry, this phone isn’t eligible for warranty exchange. Part of the screen is still lit up. You can call a corporate store to see if they’ll help you.” 
So I call up the local corporate store, and they say “Well if the system says that they can’t do an exchange, than neither can we. I don’t know why they told you to call us. They were probably just trying to get rid of you.”
What the actual fuck?! My dad is on the phone with T-Mobile the company right now, but at this point I have no idea if that will even help. I have no idea what to do.
So yeah, if I’m not super active for the next little while, it’s because of this.
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